Positron emission mammography (PEM): Effect of activity concentration, object size, and object contrast on phantom lesion detection
Autor: | David Haseley, James Rogers, Lawrence R. MacDonald, J. David Beatty, Carolyn L. Wang, Mary M. Kelly, Franklin Liu, Marna Eissa, Jay R. Parikh |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
Materials science
medicine.diagnostic_test Lesion detection business.industry media_common.quotation_subject General Medicine Imaging phantom Lesion Positron Activity concentration medicine Contrast (vision) Positron emission mammography Mammography medicine.symptom Nuclear medicine business media_common |
Zdroj: | Medical Physics. 39:6499-6508 |
ISSN: | 0094-2405 |
DOI: | 10.1118/1.4754651 |
Popis: | Purpose: To characterize the relationship between lesion detection sensitivity and injected activity as a function of lesion size and contrast on the PEM (positron emission mammography) Flex Solo II scanner using phantom experiments. Methods: Phantom lesions (spheres 4, 8, 12, 16, and 20 mm diameter) were randomly located in uniform background. Sphere activity concentrations were 3 to 21 times the background activity concentration (BGc). BGc was a surrogate for injected activity; BGc ranged from 0.44-4.1 kBq/mL, corresponding to 46-400 MBq injections. Seven radiologists read 108 images containing zero, one, or two spheres. Readers used a 5-point confidence scale to score the presence of spheres. Results: Sensitivity was 100% for lesions {>=}12 mm under all conditions except for one 12 mm sphere with the lowest contrast and lowest BGc (60% sensitivity). Sensitivity was 100% for 8 mm spheres when either contrast or BGc was high, and 100% for 4 mm spheres only when both contrast and BGc were highest. Sphere contrast recovery coefficients (CRC) were 49%, 34%, 26%, 14%, and 2.8% for the largest to smallest spheres. Cumulative specificity was 98%. Conclusions: Phantom lesion detection sensitivity depends more on sphere size and contrast than on BGc. Detection sensitivity remained {>=}90% formore » injected activities as low as 100 MBq, for lesions {>=}8 mm. Low CRC in 4 mm objects results in moderate detection sensitivity even for 400 MBq injected activity, making it impractical to optimize injected activity for such lesions. Low CRC indicates that when lesions |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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